The first dimension, health education helps to define the target audience. The second dimension is the educational diagnosis of health behavior that focuses on determining the factors that influence the actions of the target audience […] The third dimension […] is the cultural appropriateness of a health behavior. This component is crucial in the development of culturally sensitive interventions and instruments to assess the target health behavior of ethnic minority cultures (378).

Engelhard, Carolyn L. and Aruthur Garson. “The Right to Health Care and the Role of the Government in Health Policy.” Miller Center of Public Affairs. Ed. Gerald L. Bailes. 28 Feb. 2008. University of Virginia. 20 Sept. 2008 <www.millercenter.org/public/debates/healthcare->.

Engstrom, David W. “Hispanic Immigration at the New Millennium.” Hispanics in the United States. Ed. Pastora San Juan Cafferty and David W. Engstrom. New Brunkswick: Transaction, 2000. 31-68.

“Health Insurance Coverage of Latinos in the United States.” Health Initiative of the Americas. Oct. 2008. UC Berkeley School of Public Health. 1 Oct. 2008 <http://hia.berkeley.edu/documents/healthinsur.pdf>.

Hondagneu-Sotelo, Pierrette. “Families on the Frontier: From Braceros in the Fields to Braceras in the Home.”Latinos: Remaking America. Ed. Marcelo M. Suárez-Orozco and Mariela M. Páez. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002. 259-273.